Jefrey Scott Schultz has competition.

On September 9, 2019 Brenden Wysynski was out on patrol. He had an eBay-special Bernalillo County Sheriff’s Office badge, handcuffs in his car, and of course — a handgun, fortunately in a lockbox under his driver’s seat.

But the 18-year-old parking garage security guard wasn’t at a job site. Wysynski was patrolling the highway. And when he “caught” a car allegedly driving 120 miles per hour using his invisible radar, Wysynski entered cool-mode, morphing his unmarked personal vehicle into a Police Impersonator Special. And then Brenden got to work, doing, well… who knows what.

Shortly after contacting the speeding driver, Brenden, wearing jeans and lacking altogether anything resembling a uniform, waved at a real Albuquerque police officer who was driving by. The fake cop’s wave caught the real cop’s attention, and he doubled back to see what was going on.

Rolling up on Wysynski, a variety of things struck the officer as highly unusual. When he ran Not-An-Officer Wysynski’s ‘unmarked unit’ and found that it came back to Wysynski (and not to the government), the officer made contact.

Watch as the lies build and build and build… and then all come toppling down. Unbelievably, the rebuild starts almost immediately. Because the biggest Round II lie doesn’t get busted on video, I took the liberty of investigating it and busting it for you. You’ll know it when you see it.

Finally, in previously-unpublished footage, 22:25 onward, we have the mostly-just-audio of Wyzynski getting transported to jail. We learn more about his personality and gain context, though what to believe is up in the air. Wyzynski claims that he doesn’t know his wife’s phone number, nor would his family. He has been shot at, his pregnant wife is almost due, and he doesn’t like his security guard job because of the management.

Brenden is looking for work. If any of you need a police impersonator…

Don’t be like Brenden. As we learned from Dashawn Lamar Brown, “sheriffs are not police” is not a defense to impersonating a police officer.

~~~

The particularly attentive and curious among you are here to learn more about the legality of floating black box redaction. My kind of people!

Some time ago I tried to convince the City of Las Cruces that ‘floating black box’ redaction was not compliant with New Mexico’s Inspection of Public Records Act. Much to my surprise, it worked.

This is what I wrote at the time:

“It appears to be Las Cruces Police Department practice to redact video using a floating black rectangle whose sides are always parallel to the edges of the video frame. That practice effectively renders the redacted video unusable in news reporting. More importantly, however, it is inconsistent with the IPRA in that it necessarily redacts non-exempt information. In 2016 the Attorney General of New Mexico wrote the following in response to an IPRA complaint by Justin Horwath regarding a request he submitted to the Department of Corrections:

“When requested public records contain both exempt and nonexempt information, the custodian shall separate the exempt information before allowing the inspection. NMSA 1978, § 14-2-9(A). However, if redaction is necessary, the public body must redact in a way to ensure that the nonexempt information contained in the document is legible and not obscured. Public records must be accessible to the public and every copy produced must reflect the integrity of the record with the utmost clarity. The Department should immediately reproduce the information to the complainant in a legible clear format at no additional cost.”

The contemporary industry standard for redaction of video is object-based blurring. I redact incident video and audio every day and there is no substantive difference in the amount of time it takes to perform object-based blurring vs. ‘redaction via floating black rectangle.’ (It is possible, however, to do either inefficiently. Current technology – advanced object tracking in particular – makes redaction far easier than it once was.)

I encourage LCPD to shift to object-based blurring and to stop using floating black rectangles.

Pretty please?”

I was prepared to sue LCPD if it was necessary. Fortunately, ‘pretty please’ worked.

~~~

/r/realworldpolice

@realworldpolice

~~~

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26 thoughts on “Fake Cop Makes Traffic Stop, Gets Arrested by Real Cop (Complete Footage)”
  1. wtf would possess you too pull somebody over and pretend to be a cop because they were speeding wtf is wrong with white people? only white people all i’m gone say🤭

  2. You're the police. Look up the wife's number and give it to him or call her. What is it always with that One Phone call BS, like in movies from 1970..?!?

  3. This guy is just a kid…….and at the time had a baby on the way. smh

    His actions and their consequences will stick with him for a while, if not the rest of his life. What's he going to say when his kid grows up enough to understand the law and finds out his dad was a police impersonator?

    Either 1) that would inspire them to go out and become a cop for real or 2) that'd make them wonder what else he'd lied to them about over the years. What else was just an impersonation?

  4. Asks for his phonecall to ring his girlfriend…

    "hello mom, can you tell dad to come pick me up from the jail"

  5. On one hand I feel bad for this kid, even embarrassed for him, every state is a little different on how they handle this but at most it's 2 years and up too $2k. Although a judge can make an example of him and go for longer time and more money. Still, way to F up kid! Why not just go to school get a criminal justice degree go through the academy become a police officer!? On the other hand we don't need a power hungry creep who suffers from delusions of grandeur. It's actually a good thing as there are people who have shot cops at stops this I hope saved his life and he turns his life around. But all in all glad this faker is off the streets and my applause goes to the arresting officer! I don't know how the other cop didn't just start laughing when he heard this. Professional I guess. Few years back we had a guy who faked being a Firefighter and paramedic which it wasn't long till that bit him in the ass, now that's risking people's lives!!! Pissed me off and I didn't feel sorry for him. Thanks for reading!

  6. The creepiest part, is they could "arrest" and take someone captive with handcuffs and some may not even resist. This kid belongs in jail, like for a long long time. This is psycho behavior.

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